Saturday, April 18, 2009

100k down; 200, 300, 400, and 600k to go

Today was the season opener of the Boston Brevets Series, nominally 100 km, but the route was actually 68 miles.
Fifty-five of us left at 8 AM and rode to Sterling and then back to Hanscom.  (Maps of route out and route back)

It was a beautiful ride, especially around Hudson, Bolton, Sterling, Harvard, and Boxborough.  Since I didn't have a camera, I'll have to use the thousand words equivalent.
  • Photo 1 - British Redcoats and Colonial Soldiers mustering in front of their SUVs in Concord.
  • Photo 2 - Two men pruning the bushes at a blueberry farm.
  • Photo 3 - Smokey Bear holding a sign "Today's Forest Fire Risk: Very High"; in the background smoke rises above the trees.
  • Photo 4 - A tree with its branches broken off, but still hangin to the trunk.  One of many damaged trees.  Most yards had piles of broken branches.
  • Photo 5 - One of the many men cleaning up downed trees with chainsaws and chippers.
  • Photo 6 - A bonfire burning in the side yard.  Only one of the fifty or so fires I saw in the towns out past I-495.  Celebrating Earth Day?
  • Photo 7 - Hundreds of cars parked at the Minute Man National Historic Park to see the battle reenactment.
I finished with an official time of 4 hours 8 minutes.  After a winter of driving to work (gasp), I just got back on the bike 5 days ago, so I was happy finish.  And very happy I drove to the start and wouldn't have to ride home like last year.
On the way out, I was in a fast group led by a couple on a tandem.  The group included Justin (a long distance specialist from Lincoln Labs), three tri-chicks, and a guy from Minuteman Road Club.  About a mile from the checkpoint, we saw a small group of three riders already heading back.  They were the only riders ahead of us.
On the way back I couldn't keep the pace, so I sat up and enjoyed the scenery.  Near the end another tandem-led group caught me so I finished with them.  The three bikes in this group were interesting.  The tandem was a DaVinci with Independent Drive which allows the captain and stoker to pedal at different cadences.  Bruce Ingle (past Boston Brevet organizer) was on a fixed gear.  In contrast to Bruce's stripped down bike, the third bike was ridden by Mr. Gizmo.  He had a giant GPS on the handlebars, and a power meter.  He had a hub generator for head and tail lights, and a battery pack for backup lights (and this ride was all in daylight).  He had an underseat pack for tools and another toolkit that fit in his water bottle cage.  And a backpack.  And fenders, of course.

The 200k is in three weeks.





Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Fwd: Fresh from the Oven

Pane Siciliano recipe from The Bread Baker's Apprentice by Peter Reinhart

 

Pate Fermentee

Makes 16 oz, enough for 1 batch of Pane Siciliano.

  • 2 ¼ C flour
  • ¾ tsp salt
  • ½ tsp instant yeast
  • ¾ C water

 

  1. stir ingredients until makes a coarse ball.
  2. knead for 4 – 6 minutes.
  3. put in covered bowl and ferment at room temp for 1 hour.
  4. put bowl in refrigerator overnight (or up to 3 days).

 

Pane Siciliano

Traditionally baked as an S-shaped loaf, it can also be used for pizza dough (6 x 8 oz crusts), small rolls, or breadsticks.

  • 3 C pate fermentee
  • 3 ½ C flour
  • 1 ¼ tsp salt
  • 1 ¼ tsp yeast
  • 2 Tbl olive oil
  • 1 Tbl honey
  • 1 ½ C water

 

  1. remove pate fermentee from refrigerator for 1 hour
  2. add ingredients to pate fermentee and mix
  3. knead for 10 minutes
  4. ferment at room termp for 2 hours
  • for pizza divide into 4 pieces
    • shape into balls
    • toss into air to spin into crusts
    • add toppings
    • put in 500F oven for 8 minutes
  • for bread div into 3 pieces as for baguettes
    • extend to about 24 inches
    • coil dough from both ends to make S-shape
    • spray with water and sprinkle with sesame seeds
    • allow to ferment for an hour or so
    • put in 500F oven
    • add 1 cup or boiling water to steam pan
    • reduce oven to 450F
    • bake for ~15 minutes
    • rotate and bake another 10-15 minutes

Photos of the bread deleted because I exceeded my Picassa storage limit.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Beautiful Lies at The Real School of Music

Beautiful Lies was the featured band at The Real School of Music tonight. These four guys met at Berklee College of Music and play some very good original music. Phil on bass and Dave on drums lay down a heavy bass beat that you can feel in your chest. Brothers Zach and Nick play guitars and sing. They closed their set with "Save Yourself" and the guitars were screaming.


My photos of Beautiful Lies were blurry, so you'll have to make do with this photo of the bass player's cool shoes.

It was another fun, fun concert in a small space with excellent acoustics. Afterward we chatted with the band and learned a bit about how they write songs; they also signed their CD for us. If you live near Burlington, MA you should really check out the concerts at The Real School of Music. Sometime soon (probably May) Enter the Haggis will be returning for a concert with The XXX Brothers. The brothers' name isn't XXX; I just don't remember what it is. But you should remember to come to the concert.


And Architecture opened. Good luck in the Battle of the Bands.

The opening band tonight was And Architecture, four boys from Winchester High School. They got a chance to play at The Real School because they are finalists in the Winchester Battle of the Bands. The lead singer / drummer is my friend's son. I used to babysit this guy when he was a toddler; now he's playing in a band and writing songs. Cool!

I took some photos and a couple of videos, but the quality is embarrassingly poor. Groupies and parents can find the photos here, and the videos here(AA#1), here(AA#2), here(BL#1), and here(BL#2). If you want better photos, chip in for a Digital SLR camera to replace my Sony Cyber-shot and I'll try to get some better shots next time. Or you could check out the band's web site at BeautifulLies.net to hear their music and watch their videos.

To compensate for my crappy photos, I'm inserting the info about tonight's concert from The Real School's promo. It has good photos and interesting information about the band.

Berklee-Born Alternative Rock Band, Beautiful Lies, visits Real School to Launch New Full Length CD!

BeautifulLiesBand



Friday, March 27

7:00 - 9:00 PM







With over 100 shows in 1 1/2 years, the band makes live performance a high priority. Brothers Nick & Zach McLean have been writing and performing their brand of melodic alternative rock since a very young age. Working with a revolving lineup of musicians and band names, they have seen multiple album releases and tours, and have worked with many talented and experienced people. Beautiful Lies was formed after drummer David Widaman and bassist Phil Crayton met at the prestigious Berklee College of Music. The band has since released three records, toured 8 countries, and embarked on two US tours.

"Fans of alternative pop should check these guys out."
The Noise, Boston



* Opening will be Winchester Battle of the Bands Finalist *
"And Architecture"
austin T

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Jam Night at the Fiske

Michael's band from The Real School of Music played in front of 350 people at Fiske Elementary's "Pizza Night", a fundraiser for the PTO.

The mosh pit was full of slam dancing grade schoolers,
and the groupies rushed the stage to be close to the band.

video of Michael on bass in "Green Onions"
video of Michael on bass in "Sunshine of your Love"

Nick didn't play with the band tonight
(he's on a field trip to Washington, D.C.),
but the rest of the family was at the concert.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

In January we saw Guggenheim Grotto at The Real School of Music. I blogged about it here, but just this week I got hold of some video clips of the concert that I want to share. The concert video was taken by a professional crew for MTV's Palladia.

MaryBeth Maes at The Real School of Music

On Friday the 13th, Julie and I saw MaryBeth Maes in concert at The Real School of Music. MaryBeth has a great voice and we have an autographed CD of her original songs.

Interesting tidbits:
  • MaryBeth got some airtime on The River 92.5. Must be cool to hear your song on the radio.
  • She is playing at Cheers on St Patrick's Day. Appropriate for an Irish girl whose songs often feature brews, whiskey, or wine.
  • Her husband plays with Ernie Boch Jr in Ernie and the Automatics. The drummer and guitarist were in the band Boston.
The audience last night was not the typical Real School audience. It was mostly her family; the adults talked throughout the concerts and kids did a non-stop congo line. A rowdy audience focused on music can make a concert more energetic, but these people didn't even seem to be paying attention to the music.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Enter the Haggis @ The Real School of Music

Sunday, we heard "Enter the Haggis" perform at The Real School of Music. They are a Celtic rock band that includes a bagpipe player and a fiddler. These guys really rocked; may be the first time I've heard bagpipes without covering my ears.

Get a taste of the Haggis
Here are my crappy videos of their concert at The Real School
My boys take guitar and bass lessons at The Real School of Music. It's a great school of rock. In addition to private lessons, the boys play in an "ensemble" once a week. Ensemble really means rock band. They put students in groups with a singer, drummer, guitarist, bassist, and an instructor as "coach".

The Real School also has a recording studio and a concert room. In addition to concerts by the "ensembles", they give local amateur bands a chance to play in front of an audience. And once or twice a month, they have concerts by professional bands. We heard Greg Hawkes of the Cars, Guggenheim Grotto, and now Enter the Haggis at The Real School of Music. These concerts are the best, very intimate with only 50-100 people in the audience, and either free or a nominal fee. Check it out if you get the chance.

Sunday, March 08, 2009

High Cabin Adventure

Saturday I turned 48 in a cabin at the top of a mountain. The two days at Mt Cardigan were full of good fun, good food, good drinks, and good people--a lot like the previous 47 years, 364 days of my life.

The whole crew posing in front of the High Cabin. Phillip, Pauline, Sunny, Tom, Josh, Ulandt, Mario, John.

Good people. Half these people I was meeting for the first time, and my longest acquaintance was a year, but what an excellent group to hang with. Fun, adventurous, smart. And fit too! Pauline is a yoga instructor, Ulandt a ski instructor. Mario travels around the world to surf with sharks. John runs marathons in 3:02. Tom skates from NYC to DC. Josh wrestles guys 20 years younger and 50 pounds heavier, and does triathlons. Sunny does triathlons too. Acutally, it seemed like everyone but me and Mario does triathlons. But that's okay, they were still fun to hang with. And my claim to fame? First descents by sled from the summits of Mt Cardigan and Horn Pond Mountain.

Friday was overcast with light sprinkles and freezing rain in the forecast. Appropriate weather for the drudgery of hauling all the supplies up the mountain to the high cabin.

Hmmm, this ain't so bad... Josh with a fully loaded sled on the flat section at the bottom.

The trail starts to get steeper and is about to get all off-camber on us. Mario with a heavy pack and snowboard. Plus a sled loaded with firewood and chili.

Mario's sled had two heavy bundles of firewood needed to keep us warm and toasty through the winter night. Then the trail started to get steeper. But it was the tricky off-camber section that really wore us out. The sleds kept slipping off the trail and dumping the supplies down the slope towards the creek. Wading through the waist-deep snow to retrieve the 12-pack of SmuttyNose, I decided I'd had enough. We left half the supplies in a pile next to the trail and pushed on (pulled on?) with much lighter sleds. Good decision, as the trail got much steeper as we neared the cabin.

Luckily this was near the top. I don't look like I could go much further.

Snack time. Mario and Josh take a break between loads. You know what would taste great with these Doritos? Those beers lying next to the trail half way down the mountain.

The payoff for all that hiking: Mario making turns on the Alexandria ski trail.

Josh looking rad on the Mad River Rocket. Sleds were made to go down, not up.

Pauline, Sunny, John and Tom at the Crew Bridge. Soon they will discover the cache we left for them to carry up to the cabin.

Tom won the prize for heaviest pack. I couldn't even lift it.

I like maps. And compasses. But I was still glad to hear them yell, "Phil, the trails over here" after my sled shortcut left me bushwhacking through dense forest.

Summit at sundown: Ulandt, Pauline, John, Phillip.

Good drinks. I thought a bottle of red and a bottle of white would be good with cheese and crackers before dinner. Josh thought a single malt would be good around the wood stove. Sunny preferred spiced rum in a hip flask. John likes port and Tom goes for brandy. Ulandt and Pauline brought wine in a box. Oh yeah, and everyone likes a cold one after hiking. Plus lots of water. And cocoa, tea, even espresso. The door's squeaky hinges woke us several times that night as people snuck out to water the forest.

We talked about watching the sun rise from the summit. Then we stayed up late playing Bananagrams instead. I did make it to PJ Ledge in time to do the daily dozen, but the sun slept in.

Good food. Cheese (Mancebo, Asiago, Jarlsburg, Camembert, aged goat cheese,...) and crackers. Also Italian cheese bread. Chili and cornbread for dinner. Dark chocolate, crystallized ginger, ginger covered in dark chocolate, almonds. Doritos (yum) and chips. Bagels with creme cheese and lox for breakfast. Also omelettes, and espresso and tea. Bananas and Mineolas. Good thing we were playing hard whenever we weren't eating.

Tom and Mario on South Peak. The sun came out and it was a beautiful day.

Phillip lugged his sled all around the top of the mountain, braving high winds and encroaching tree branches. The payoff was the best sledding on the mountain just above the fire warden's cabin.

Phillip almost gets air on his Mad River Rocket.

The chickadee is not impressed.

After the morning hike, everyone headed in different directions. Mario took his snowboard down Alexandria's and then hiked up Firescrew to ride Dukes. Josh and Phillip piled gear and trash on their sleds and rode them down to the parking lot, stowed everything in the car, then relaxed in the base lodge for awhile. Later we joined Pauline, Sunny, and Ulandt for a short x-country ski trip out and back on the Z93 trail near the base lodge. Most fun I've had on skinny skis since that day in Tetons National Park. Well, except for that and the day in Yellowstone. Anyhow, it was a lot more fun than skiing at the local golf course.

Josh gets in a little x-country skiing before heading home to play tennis.

Ulandt led some of us on an excellent ski trip up and down Z93.

Emerging from the woods with the AMC base lodge in the background.

More photos:

Lessons learned:
  • A sled with a tow rope is not a pulk. Need rigid tow poles and better tiedown system.
  • Lighten the load. Sleds don't have special anti-gravity powers.
  • Beer in cans, wine in boxes. Glass is heavy. Could have saved 8.5 pounds.
  • AudioBooks on iPod. Magazines are heavy and it's hard to read by candelight. Could have saved 2.5 pounds.
  • Avoid duplicates. Two people brought corkscrews. Could have saved 2.5 ounces.
  • Triathletes are serious about their Bananagrams.
  • AT ski boots are not hiking boots.
  • Pack it in; pack it out. I rode my sled back down sitting on a bag of trash. Felt sort of like the Grinch returning all the toys to Whoville.
  • Single stream recycling is gross when you are the one separating the streams. At the cabin we threw all the trash into one big bag. Today I separated the bottles from the plastic, and added the kitchen scraps and paper towels to my compost pile. Everything was coated in olive oil and coffee grounds. Yuk.

Monday, March 02, 2009

Massachusetts Youth Wrestling Championships

Sunday, March 1

Nick wrestled in the state championships today, an open tournament that attracts all the best wrestlers in the state. The top three in each weight class advance to the New England Youth Wrestling Championships.

This was Nick's first opportunity to wrestle against top-level competition. Nick's only other tournament experience was at the Big East Tournament, where he wrestled in the novice division and won all his matches, mostly by early pins. Maybe we should have called it the Big Easy.

I didn't see any bad matches. All of the wrestlers were competent and tough. Nick wrestled in one of the largest weight classes; there were 38 boys in the 98 pound division. There was almost one fewer, because Nick weighed in at 98.2 pounds. Too many gummy bears at the basketball game the night before. But after 15 minutes jogging around the gym, Nick was cleared to wrestle at 98.

He won his first match against Chris Sullivan (Canton) handily, 8-2, but almost got in trouble at the end of the match.

Nick's 2nd match (click to view)
Next he had to face the #4 seed, Jim Chappius (Duxbury). After two periods, Nick was winning 6-3. Nick started the third period on top, but his opponent reached back and caught him in a headlock and Nick spent the entire period fighting the pin. The reverse and near fall gave his opponent an 8-6 victory. The scorers had it wrong, showing a 6-6 tie, but their coach caught the mistake and our coaches confirmed that the score should be 8-6.

Nick's 3rd match (click to view)
In the consolation round, Nick wrestled Mike Trzcienski (Dracut) and neither one of them scored a point for three periods. In overtime, Nick shot quickly and took his opponent down for the victory.

Nick's 4th match (click to view)
Nick wrestled next against the #5 seed, Danny Cassidy (Billerica). His opponent got a takedown in each of the first two periods for a 4-0 lead. Nick started down in the third period and got a reverse to make it 4-2. With time running out, he got his opponent in a cradle and tried to put him on his back to earn the win, but couldn't turn him over in time.

Nick's second loss ended his day so we headed home. Two wins to offset the two losses was quite an accomplishment at this high profile tournament. Nick stepped up to the challenge of the competition and fought smart and hard to the last second of every match.

A 260-pound match with an 80-pound match in the background.
Middle schoolers come in all shapes and sizes: most were thin and wirey,
a few had bulging muscles, one had a beard, another had breasts.

Awesome results for Winchester at the Mass Youth Wrestling Championships. Winchester only took six wrestlers, and three of them placed. Congratulations to
  • Tyler Christoper - 1st place
  • Marcos Torres - 4th place
  • Nathan Landau - 1st place
Complete results here.


Jackson Hole Ski Trip, 2009 - departure

Satuday, Feb 28

Today I got up at 4:35 (just a few hours after my late night in the Great Room) and headed to the airport. Our plane was delayed because the de-icing truck was broken, but I made the connection in Denver and got home on schedule.

Julie picked me up at Logan and we joined the Bubbas, the Beaners, and the little Doobers at the Harvard v. Cornell basketball game. A great week ended with a great victory as Harvard held on at the buzzer to beat the #1 team in the Ivy League.

The Tetons as seen from the airport.

Julie, Alexa and Shoes.

Michael, the little Beaners, and Bubba.

Eric and Nick.

Final score.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Jackson Hole Ski Trip, 2009 - Day 14, Granite Canyon

Friday, Feb 27
Granite Canyon's Mile Long Couloir.

Somehow I lost my glasses. (Found them; I'm a teensy bit drunk.) In spite of all that, today was awesome. I am totally skied out, and yet I didn't make any in bounds turns (actually I did ski Rendezvous Bowl twice, but still...)

We got in the tram line at 8:15, but that was 15 minutes too late to catch the first tram at 9:00. We were sandwiched between New Jersey guy and the Million Dollar Man for almost an hour before the mountain opened and we got to ski. New Jersey guy told us that he heard that there were three JH locals in their 40's who retired and skied all the time. He heard they hired a guide so they could cut line, but they skied so fast that they just told the guide to meet them at the tram so they could cut line again. Frank just shrugged and said "Hmmm." I was skeptical, because the guides I knew skied super fast and I couldn't imagine three whipper snappers skiing faster. Over drinks at dinner that night, Frank told me that the guide was Sammy, slowed down by a broken tibia. The three "retirees" were Clint, Ned, and Frank himself.

(This followed a chance encounter in the tram line the day before. I mentioned that my brother-in-law and sister-in-law lived in town. Later I referred to them by name. The local we were talking to said, "Everyone knows Frank and Mimi." Geordie wants to create a web site with that as a title.)

The Million Dollar Man was a guy wearing a CMH "Million Vertical Feet" jacket, that you earn by doing a ton of heli-skiing. I was impressed, but Frank pointed out over dinner, that wearing the jacket is like bragging that you spent $100,000 on heli skiing. In Jackson, such ostentation is frowned upon. Even I was turned off by the Million Dollar Man's story about his acceptance speech when awarded the jacket. They gave him the jacket and he tried it on, but said he was worried the ski pants wouldn't fit. He dropped trou, exposing his G-string and the "Congratulations" markered on his butt cheek with a Sharpie. Please. It is early and we just want to relax until we get to the top of the mountain.

OK. On to the skiing. Frank had us buckle our boots and packs while standing in line. That way we could zoom off the tram and ski down the bowl before the hordes. We exited the ski area boundary at the lower gate and hiked up to Four Pines. The run down was awesome. We floated through light powder and got first tracks the whole way. The hike up Paranoia Ridge seemed easier than the day before, and we took the run from the top of Four Pines without stopping. At the bottom, Mimi and Frank paid me the HUGE compliment of saying that I looked balanced on my skis. I was rocking the BROs for the second day in a row, and all was right with the world.
Geordie skiing through the willows at the runout from Four Pines.

When Geordie asked me what to wear that morning, I told him that we were going to ski in bounds until it was tracked out, and then we would move to Rock Springs Canyon for some out of bounds turns that didn't require any hiking. How wrong I was!

Four Pines requires a steep climb up Paranoia Ridge and a longer climb up to the top of Four Pines. But that was nothing compared to what Frank and Mimi had in store for us. The tram line was super long when we got back to the bottom, so we took the gondola. At the top, we decided to do a run in Granite Canyon. First we had to climb the boot pack from the gondola to the top of the Headwall. I passed a bunch of people on the way up and nearly had a coronary from the exertion. At the top, I ate a "cow pie" (sort of like a pizza in a bun) and rested while waiting for Geordie to catch up.
The top of the Headwall climb.

The climb up the Headwall turned out to be the easiest part of the day. We traversed out past Casper Bowl and the Crags, and ducked the rope to ski down the backside into Granite Canyon. The entry into Mile Long Couloir was sketchy. We had to tiptoe down a rock strewn chute before it opened up into a very skiable couloir. The upside of the tricky entrance, is that the couloir doesn't get skied as much as Endless Couloir with an easy entrance right next door.

Mimi checking out the entrance to Mile Long Couloir,
straight ahead across the rocks and then down.

Geordie made it through the rocks into the couloir.

Mimi ready to drop into Mile Long Couloir.

The name Mile Long Couloir may be an exaggeration, but it was plenty long for me. The top was steep enough that I made jump turns. The next section I skied with big, round turns, until Frank shot by me and showed me how to do it: Swoop right down the fall line, faster and faster. I got so caught up in the sensation, that I forgot the basics of backcountry skiing: one at a time and only stop in safety zones. The couloir is so long--Frank guesses 2500 feet vertical--that I couldn't ski it without stopping a couple of times. Fortunately, the snow was very stable and avalanche danger was moderate.

Looking back up Mile Long Couloir from the bottom.

Frank at the bottom of Mile Long Couloir.

Mimi at the bottom of Mile Long Couloir.

Geordie at the bottom of Mile Long Couloir.

Self portrait of Phillip at the bottom of Mile Long Couloir.

The hardest part of the day was the traverse out of Granite Canyon back to the ski resort. Rumor has it that the traverse is 5 miles long. The first half is mostly uphill and we spent a lot of energy sidestepping. At an obvious resting point, I took off my helmet and unzipped my jacket and pulled up my sleeves. Immediately after we got going again, we had a fast downhill traverse with the most massive whoop-de-doos I have ever encountered on skis. I wished my helmet was back on my head, for sure. An interminable time later, we reached the boundaries of the ski area again. It was surreal reentering the controlled and groomed world of the ski area. It was like walking out of the wilderness into Disney World. Most of the skiers inbounds had no idea what lay just on the other side of the ropes. Of course, there are a few skiers who do laps on the route we just finished. Those people are so strong, it is ridiculous. Once a day is plenty for me. Geordie said once a lifetime for him.

The long traverse home from Granite Canyon (~45 minutes).

Even the snow loves my BROs.

After a big lunch of split pea soup, broiled sweet potato fries, and tortellinis with tomato and mushroom sauce, we headed back out for the last run of the trip, an easy (no hiking required) out of bounds run down Rock Springs Canyon. Mimi called her daughter's school and arranged for Michelle to hang out at the Village Cafe for 30 minutes because we wouldn't make it back before the bus dropped her off. As expected, Rock Springs was tracked out, but was still fun to ski. It will have to do until next time. Returning to the ski resort, I headed to Wildernest to buy a photo-map of Granite Canyon. Cutting through the VC, I heard, "Hi Doober!" It was Michelle patiently waiting for us to get back. Thanks Michelle for letting me borrow your Mom as a ski guide.
Frank, Mimi, and Geordie at GameFish.

That night Geordie took us out to dinner at GameFish. First we shared a bottle of champagne (thanks Mimi) at the Teton Club. After a toast to our hosts and guides--"everyone knows Frank and Mimi"--we walked to the restaurant and had a great time telling stories from the ski trip.

Back at the Teton Club, the bar was rocking. So I stopped in and hung out with Quinn Connor, Twenty-seven, and some Mass members. Aaron was the only one sober. Some funny stories I'll try to add later.

Friday, February 27, 2009

Jackson Hole Ski Trip, 2009 - Day 13, Rockin' the BROs

Thursday, Feb 26

It snowed a ton today. In the morning we headed O.B. and did a Four Pines. We got a bunch of untracked. We went up the tram and out the high gate. From there we skied down Far Drift which is basically skiing down Rendezvous Bowl, but on the other side of the Jackson Hole Resort boundary. So we got freshies the whole way.

Then the work begins. We hiked up the short, but steep Paranoia Ridge. There is a beautiful, but short powder run right next to the boot track which Mimi and I skied last year. I thought it might be fun to repeat this year, but by the time I got to the top I was huffing and puffing and covered in sweat, so skiing down and hiking up a second time didn't seem as attractive.

Frank, Greg, and Mimi somewhere on the way to Four Pines.


After a short traverse, we made a longer, but less steep hike up to Four Pines. There was quite a crowd on top, but we got geared up and away before most of the rest of them. My favorite part of this run was a couple of slots through the rocks; the snow was deep and we shot down the slots and then down the face below to the bottom of the slope. It looked like a reasonably long run from the top, but much too soon we were at the bottom. We must have been screaming down the hill, because it ended way earlier than I expected.

Then we had a long traverse back from Rock Springs Canyon to the ski area. It wasn't really that far, but with Greg on his snowboard, traverses can be a travail. Especially when he gets too low and has to climb back up to the track. Second year running this happened. I joked that last week I skied the Triple No (No Shadows, No Name Peak, No Name Canyon) and today we skied the Triple Slow (we waited for George on the climbs, we waited for me on the descents, and we waited for Greg on the traverse). As usual, Mimi and Frank were excellent and patient guides, leading us to the best runs and educating us about safety in the backcountry.

Yay! George made it.


Phillip and George at the top of Four Pines.


After lunch, Greg, George and I went back out and had some of the best runs of the entire trip. We stayed inbounds and took a couple of trams and a gondie. The snow was fine in the Bowl, but was wicked fun in the Hobacks. We were skiing fast and smooth, getting face shots on some of the turns. Greg was ripping on his snowboard, throwing up a plume of snow as he sped down the mountain. George was linking beautiful turns, flowing from one to the next. And I thought I was skiing about the best I have ever skied. I felt fast and in total control, with big smooth turns in the open parts of the slope and then making quick turns to dive between the trees at the bottom.

Greg nearly impaled himself on this punji stick in the Hobacks. (See the broken branch next to his knee?)


George rests for a moment before ripping down the rest of the Hobacks.


I attribute my breakthrough skiing to three things:
  1. Change in attitude. Instead of overanalyzing my technique and criticizing everytime I got in the backseat or off balance, I decided to do my best and enjoy the skiing regardless if I was skiing as well as the rest of the party. This really paid off in our Four Pines trip. I don't think I've ever had so much fun out of bounds before. I just skied and didn't worry about how I looked.
  2. Change in technique. At lunch, George and Greg made some suggestions on how to improve my skiiing. In particular, narrowing my stance and keeping my hands in closer and driving down the slope. I have been working on just these things all week, but when we go OB or the conditions deteriorate, I tend to forget and go back to my bad habits. When we went back out after lunch, I put it all together and flew down the mountain like never before. I really felt that my skiing was BRO-worthy.
  3. Change in conditions. We probably got 12 inches of snow today. It made skiing much easier. It was pretty close to hero snow and probably accounts for some of my improvement. But I think it all started with having the right attitude.
We were on the 2nd to last tram and then got on the gondola at 3:57, three minutes before it closed. Everyone on the mountain was giddy, enjoying the excellent conditions. The gondie operators agreed with me that they should keep the lifts running until dark because it was just to good to quit and go inside. But the ski day did end after a last run down Casper Bowl, and we just hope for more of the same tomorrow.

Dinner was a lot of fun. Greg made a wilted brussel sprout salad and I made pizzas. We drank more of George's wine and went to bed early. Greg leaves at 5 AM tomorrow and the rest of us want to get in the tram line early for more POW.